Re: where does wget put its file [solved]

From: Jeff Vian <jvian10 charter net>

To: For users of Fedora Core releases <fedora-list redhat com>

Subject: Re: where does wget put its file [solved]

Date: Wed, 29 Dec 2004 10:20:48 -0600

On Wed, 2004-12-29 at 21:53 +1100, david wrote:
> On Wed, 2004-12-29 at 21:12, Richard S. Crawford wrote:
> > On Wednesday 29 December 2004 01:52, david wrote:
> >
> > > thats the trouble i was at root when the download started and i cannt
> > > find any files, by name, by size anywhere from root on down
> > > got me
> > > its downloading from ftp://mirror.pacific.net.au/???????
> > > so it should of created a folder called mirror.pacific.net.au
> > > would this be correct?
> > > but its still not there either.
> > > it still downloading madly, i just hope its saving them somewhere
> > > its actually all the files to make and iso from
> > > havent found a repository for 64bit man 10.1
> > > thanks
> >
> > Not to sound like a smartass, but:
> >
> > # pwd
> >
> > should tell you what directory your files are in. Unless you specifically
> > gave wget a destination folder to put files into, it should download them
> > into your current working directory. It would not have created a folder
> > called mirror.pacific.net.au or whatever; it would have just put the files
> > into the directory you're currently in. When I used wget earlier today to
> > get the gpg keys for the kde-redhat repository, the file was placed in my
> > current working directory, no subdirectories created or anything like that.
> >
> > --
> > Richard S. Crawford (mailto: rscrawford mossroot com)
> > AIM: Buffalo2K / http://www.mossroot.com
> > "You can't depend on your judgment when your imagination is out of focus."
> > -Mark Twain
>
>
> they are in /root hence any searches couldnt find them
> it has created all the file structures and everything is there
> mirror.pacific.net.au/????/???/?/?????
> ill have to do everything from root now to create the iso
> sorry to have stolen your time
> thanks for your help
> david
>
Not necessarily.
You can do (as root) mv /root/mirror.pacific.net.au /home/youruser
then chown -r youruser:yourgroup /home/youruser/mirror.pacific.net.au
That will relocate the entire directory tree to your users home
directory and give permissions to the user so nothing else requires root
privileges (except installs of course).
HTH